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Review
of government and business 'relationship' urgent
Takura
Zhangazha
June 20, 2012
http://takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com/2012/06/review-of-government-and-business.html
In the last
fortnight there have been a number of media reports on the non-transparent
tendencies of stakeholders in the banking and fuel procurement sectors
of our national economy. These media reports indicate that due to
a patent lack of transparency and accountability, the country is
now faced with a new crisis with some banks as well as a potential
fuel procurement scam that if unattended to, will affect petrol
and diesel supplies into the country. It would have been expected
that government would have immediately announced an investigation
at the highest level concerning to not only these two matters but
even others that have been reported on in the media.
As it turns
out, the government may not be taking these issues as seriously
as one would expect. This even after the now embarrassing debacle
that appears to be the Essar and Green Fuel investment projects
that cabinet is said to be reviewing. The reasons for such an ambivalent
approach by the state to matters of serious national concern are
generally given as the 'unworkable' and difficult relationships
of the parties that comprise the inclusive government. But on the
emerging scandals concerning the credibility of our banks as well
as the procurement of fuel, this reason is thoroughly inadequate
and democratically unacceptable.
The gravity
of the economic challenges that are apparent for some people and
businesses that are currently unable to access their savings due
to the challenges of some of our banks and the serious hints at
shady deals around fuel supplies did not emerge out of the blue.
They are most likely the culmination of lack of serious government
oversight into these sectors (and probably others) in the last four
years. Unfortunately it however appears as though this lack of serious
oversight on the part of government is not merely due to a lack
of capacity but may now increasingly be telltale evidence of a potentially
unhealthy relationship between government and our own version of
'big' business.
The symptoms
of this unfortunate state of affairs have been glaring. In the last
year or so there have been many reported stories concerning various
state related entities or crucial services and the dubious transactions
that have taken place under the watch of government. These transactions
have ranged from the controversial involvement of the National Social
Security Agency (NSSA) with various banks and trusts, the 'prematurely'
granted Essar-Ziscosteel deal, the bio fuel project in Chisumbanje
and of late the recent problems at Interfin and Genesis banks. In
all this one cannot avoid the rumours that some of the companies
and concerns that are now under the spotlight are suspected to be
politically connected to one party or the other in the inclusive
government. Moreover there are whispers that some senior government
officials have or had direct business interests in some of these
and other related commercial entities, a matter that can only leave
a sour taste in the mouth.
Given the foregoing,
it is necessary that there be an urgent but independent review of
the relationship between various business interests and the state
as well as individual political leaders in government. The necessity
of such a review is premised on the democratic importance of ensuring
that both business and the state are accountable to the people of
Zimbabwe as well as to stem the rising 'mafia culture' that seems
to be defining state-business relations.
Further to this,
the review would enable our country's 'big' businesses to revisit
their operational ethics and values in order not only to adhere
to them but to improve on them urgently. The inclusive government
must also revisit its approach on its interactions with local and
international capital. As regards the former, government must insist
on an understanding that a business concern is not just about personal
aggrandizement. Its primarily about innovation in the supply of
goods or services in the greatest public interest of the country.
This would assist in combating the murky culture of opulence amidst
poverty that has been demonstrated by some of our prominent business
persons and sad to say, most of the members of cabinet.
Finally, and
in aide of emphasis, the collusion (if any) between government and
prominent commercial concerns is undemocratic and prone to high
levels of corruption. It is also dangerous because when elites with
political power and those with access to resources have fingers
in both pies, it leads to the creation of a 'mafia' that may, with
time, be impossible to bring to account.
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